River Smite
The River Smite is a river twenty miles long, a tributary of the River Devon, which flows through Leicestershire and south-east Nottinghamshire.
The source is near the hamlet of Holwell, Leicestershire and it joins the Devon near Shelton, Nottinghamshire. The Smite and its tributaries, such as the River Whipling, the Stroom Dyke, and the Dalby Brook, drain an area of 75 square miles of farmland in the Vale of Belvoir.
Name
In the 17th century the river was known as the Snite. This and the modern spelling are thought to derive from the Old English smita, denoting a foul or miry place. This links with another Old English word smitan, which means to daub or pollute. It implies that the Smite was a dirty, miry stream.[1][2]
Sources
The river draws from several springs near Holwell, along a spring line where the local permeable ironstone meets the lower mudstones on the flank of the Bleak Hills, which form part of the Belvoir Ridge. However, the source of the Smite is also attributed to another spring a thousand yards to the north called Holwell Mouth, a chalybeate or mineral spring in a wooded ravine to the north of Holwell. The spring is now disused, but in the 17th and 18th centuries was thought to have healing properties and had stone seating for those taking the waters. It contains iron salts that give it a reddish colour and ostensibly a sulphurous taste. The name Holwell, of Saxon origin, means "spring or stream in a hollow".[3][4][5][6]
Course
Various tributaries that descend from the Bleak Hills join the Smite as it flows in a north-westerly direction, before turning north-east at the bottom of the escarpment, into the lower-lying Vale of Belvoir. It is spanned by an aqueduct of the Grantham Canal, then continues in a north-westerly direction to meet Dalby Brook. This tributary drains the south-west of the catchment, rising near Old Dalby, then flowing between Upper and Nether Broughton and past Hickling to the junction with the Smite. Beyond this confluence the river flows through Colston Bassett and beside Wiverton Hall, where it is joined by the Stroom Dyke. It continues through farmland, until it reaches the A52, where it passes between the villages of Whatton-in-the-Vale and Aslockton. It is joined by the River Whipling as it flows past the remains of the motte and bailey of Aslockton Castle. The river continues north-east, beside the villages of Orston, Thoroton, Flawborough and Shelton, where it meets the River Devon.[7]
River Whipling
The River Whipling, a river six miles long, is the main tributary of the Smite. Its source is the confluence of two tributaries, the Rundle Beck and the Grimmer, which meet near Granby. The Whipling then flows around the village, before taking a north-easterly course to join the Smite near Whatton.
The Whipling and tributaries drain some twenty square miles of the Vale of Belvoir, contributing about a quarter of the Smite's catchment area.[7]
References
- ↑ Mutschmann, Heinrich (2012). The Place-Names of Nottinghamshire: Their Origin and Development. Cambridge University Press. pp. 124. ISBN 9781107665415. https://books.google.com/books?id=iCzE3QAPvO4C&pg=PA124.
- ↑ "A History of Colston Bassett (1942)". Nottinghamshire History. nottshistory.org.uk. http://www.nottshistory.org.uk/monographs/young1942/chapter2.htm.
- ↑ Harrison, William (1882). Geology of the counties of England and of North and South Wales. Kelly. pp. https://archive.org/details/geologycounties00harrgoog/page/n200 157]. https://archive.org/details/geologycounties00harrgoog.
- ↑ "Vale of Belvoir – Section 1". Countryside Appraisal. Nottinghamshire County Council. http://cms.nottinghamshire.gov.uk/home/environment/landimprovements/landscapecharacter/countrysideappraisal/countrysideappraisal-chaptertwelve.htm.
- ↑ "Holwell Mouth". The Megalithic Portal. megalithic.co.uk. http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=10231.
- ↑ David Mills (20 October 2011). A Dictionary of British Place-Names. Oxford University Press. pp. 244–. ISBN 978-0-19-960908-6. https://books.google.com/books?id=tXucAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA244.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "Water Framework Directive - River Basin Management Plans". What's in your Backyard. Environment Agency. http://maps.environment-agency.gov.uk/wiyby/wiybyController?x=357683.0&y=355134.0&scale=1&layerGroups=default&ep=map&textonly=off&lang=_e&topic=wfd_rivers#x=470363&y=331341&lg=1,7,8,9,5,6,&scale=6.